The tennis fans of France love to make their presence felt, and they succeeded on Sunday at Roland Garros. While their countrywoman Kristina "Kiki" Mladenovic duked it out with defending champion Garbiñe Muguruza over three rousing sets, the crowd in Court Suzanne Lenglen roared and chanted and foot-stamped their support for their player. This time, unlike hundreds of times before at this tournament, their efforts paid off.
Mladenovic won the see-saw slugfest. 6-1, 3-6, 6-3. As Muguruza walked off, an announcer encouraged the crowd, which had booed her at times, to give her a hand. Her finger wag in response told you all you needed to know about what she thought of them.
Fairness is not the French fans’ forte, or primary concern. Drama is; the more they can whip up, the better. That can be tough on the players, but if you’ve ever watched a match at Roland Garros where a player from France is involved, you’ll never forget it. The spectators at the Australian Open are enthusiastic; at Wimbledon, they’re respectful; at the U.S. Open, they’re uninhibited. Only at Roland Garros do you feel like a tennis match might turn into a real live riot at any moment. Suzanne Lenglen is the court where Roger Federer finally had to scream “Shut up!” at the crowd. And they were rooting for him.
Many French players over the years have felt Federer’s pain. The intensity of the fan support in Paris can feel suffocating, and it certainly hasn’t produced anything in the way of results. The only male player from France to win at Roland Garros in the Open era is Yannick Noah in 1983; the only woman to do it is Mary Pierce in 2000, and she was born in Canada and raised in the United States. The last few years have been littered with spectacular French flameouts: Richard Gasquet losing from two sets up to Andy Murray in 2010 and Stan Wawrinka in 2013; Gael Monfils doing the same against Tommy Robredo in 2013; Jo-Wilfried Tsonga covering his head with a towel after blowing match points against Novak Djokovic in 2012.
If anything, it has been worse on the women’s side, where title contenders have been few and far between. Amelie Mauresmo, the last WTA No. 1 from France, won the Australian Open and Wimbledon, but never made it past the quarterfinals at Roland Garros. I was reminded of Mauresmo’s anxiety-filled appearances on Court Philippe Chatrier when Mladenovic began her first-rounder there this year. One of the tour’s most improved players of 2017, she had come to Paris looking like a potential champion. But she quickly dropped the first set to 88th-ranked Jennifer Brady, and had to leave the court to get treatment on her back. Mladenovic had never been past the third round in Paris; this time it looked like she would be lucky to finish a match.